NA

Nariman House, witness to 26/11 attacks, to be turned into memorial

Herald Team
PTI, MUMBAI: The Nariman House, that was under siege during the 26/11 terror attacks, is being converted into a 'living memorial' dedicated to those killed in the carnage.   formal announcement on the setting up of the memorial will be made during the Mumbai visit of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu this week. Rabbi Gavriel and Rivka Holtzberg, the Jewish couple who served as directors at the Nariman House, also known as the Chabad House, were killed along with six others when the place came under attack by 10 Pakistani terrorists during the November 2008 attacks.
The couple ran a cultural and outreach centre for the Chabad-Lubavitch movement in the five-storey landmark building in south Mumbai's Colaba area. The couple's son Moshe Holtzberg, who was two years old then and was saved by his Indian nanny, will return to the Nariman House this week for the first time since the tragedy struck the family more than nine years ago.
The memorial, being set up by Jewish organisation Chabad-Lubavitch, will be formally announced at an event during Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's visit here on Thursday, Rabbi Israel Kozolovasky, who heads the Nariman House at present, said. The "living memorial" has been designed to educate and inspire people of all faiths to act for the betterment of themselves, their communities and the world, he told PTI in an interview.
"The memorial at the Nariman House will put the spotlight on the lives of Rabbi Gavriel and his wife and the ideals and values that catalysed them to pursue their lives for the benefit of the humanity," he said. The memorial will include the apartment where the Holtzbergs lived, as well as the sites where the killings happened, he said. The terrace of the Nariman House will be turned into a garden where names of all the victims will be engraved, he said. 
SCROLL FOR NEXT